Lesson 22 SIR2011 Patterson Theory DIRDIF Patty Solve your structures.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
More on symmetry Learning Outcomes:
Advertisements

Intensities Learning Outcomes By the end of this section you should: understand the factors that contribute to diffraction know and be able to use the.
Equivalent Positions in 3-D
In this section we’ll consider space groups Pm, Cm, Pc and Cc
Phasing Goal is to calculate phases using isomorphous and anomalous differences from PCMBS and GdCl3 derivatives --MIRAS. How many phasing triangles will.
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M.Che.1101 WS 2010/11 – 7 Modern Methods of Inorganic Chemistry Mi 10:15-12:00, Hörsaal II George Sheldrick
1 We are now ready to move to the monoclinic system. There are 13 monoclinic space groups. Monoclinic crystals belong to crystal classes 2, m or 2/m. In.
Lesson 12—Working with Space Groups How to convert a space group to a point group Adding the translational elements Calculating the coordinates of the.
Overview of the Phase Problem
X-Ray Crystallography
CHAPTER 2 : CRYSTAL DIFFRACTION AND PG Govt College for Girls
Lecture 2: Crystal Symmetry
Lec. (4,5) Miller Indices Z X Y (100).
Expression of d-dpacing in lattice parameters
CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS PHYSICS PAPER A BSc. (III) (NM and CSc.) Harvinder Kaur Associate Professor in Physics PG.Govt College for Girls Sector -11, Chandigarh.
A Brief Description of the Crystallographic Experiment
No friction. No air resistance. Perfect Spring Two normal modes. Coupled Pendulums Weak spring Time Dependent Two State Problem Copyright – Michael D.
Mineralogy Carleton College Winter Lattice and its properties Lattice: An imaginary 3-D framework, that can be referenced to a network of regularly.
How to read and understand… Title.
Chem Once an apparently reasonable initial solution has been found, as indicated by a chemically reasonable electron density distribution, it can.
3. Crystals What defines a crystal? Atoms, lattice points, symmetry, space groups Diffraction B-factors R-factors Resolution Refinement Modeling!
Fourier transform. Fourier transform Fourier transform.
19 Feb 2008 Biology 555: Crystallographic Phasing II p. 1 of 38 ProteinDataCrystalStructurePhases Overview of the Phase Problem John Rose ACA Summer School.
The Effects of Symmetry in Real and Reciprocal Space Sven Hovmöller, Stockholm Univertsity Mirror symmetry 4-fold symmetry.
PH0101 UNIT 4 LECTURE 3 CRYSTAL SYMMETRY CENTRE OF SYMMETRY
Elementary Crystallography for X-ray Diffraction
Introduction to Crystallography
Analysis of crystal structure x-rays, neutrons and electrons
Chem Systematic Absences The presence of translational symmetry elements and centering in the real lattice causes some series of reflections to.
Patterson Space and Heavy Atom Isomorphous Replacement
Crystallography and Diffraction Theory and Modern Methods of Analysis Lectures 1-2 Introduction to Crystal Symmetry Dr. I. Abrahams Queen Mary University.
Chem Lattices By definition, crystals are periodic in three dimensions and the X-ray diffraction experiment must be understood in the context of.
Twinning Non-merohedral twinning Merohedral twinning.
Chem Patterson Methods In 1935, Patterson showed that the unknown phase information in the equation for electron density:  (xyz) = 1/V ∑ h ∑ k.
Please CLOSE YOUR LAPTOPS, and turn off and put away your cell phones, and get out your note- taking materials.
Chem Structure Factors Until now, we have only typically considered reflections arising from planes in a hypothetical lattice containing one atom.
Phasing Today’s goal is to calculate phases (  p ) for proteinase K using PCMBS and EuCl 3 (MIRAS method). What experimental data do we need? 1) from.
1. Diffraction intensity 2. Patterson map Lecture
Lesson 12—Working with Space Groups
Page 1 X-ray crystallography: "molecular photography" Object Irradiate Scattering lens Combination Image Need wavelengths smaller than or on the order.
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M.Che.1101 WS 2010/11 – 8 Modern Methods of Inorganic Chemistry Mi 10:15-12:00, Hörsaal II George Sheldrick
Lesson 13 How the reciprocal cell appears in reciprocal space. How the non-translational symmetry elements appear in real space How translational symmetry.
Lesson 13 How the reciprocal cell appears in reciprocal space. How the non-translational symmetry elements appear in real space How translational symmetry.
What is the problem? How was the problem solved?
Crystalline Solids :-In Crystalline Solids the atoms are arranged in some regular periodic geometrical pattern in three dimensions- long range order Eg.
Protein Structure Determination Lecture 4 -- Bragg’s Law and the Fourier Transform.
Atomic structure model
Homework Look at the Space Group P21/c (#14). This is the most common space group for small molecules. 1. No protein has ever been found to crystallize.
ESO 214: Nature and Properties of Materials
Calculation of Structure Factors
Absolute Configuration Types of space groups Non-centrosymmetric Determining Absolute Configuration.
Before Beginning – Must copy over the p4p file – Enter../xl.p4p. – Enter../xl.hkl. – Do ls to see the files are there – Since the.p4p file has been created.
Key things to know to describe a crystal
Interpreting difference Patterson Maps in Lab this week! Calculate an isomorphous difference Patterson Map (native-heavy atom) for each derivative data.
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M.Che.1101 WS 2010/11 – 9 Modern Methods of Inorganic Chemistry Mi 10:15-12:00, Hörsaal II George Sheldrick
Problem Set Problem 1—These are NOT orthogonal coordinates. Generally d=(a 2 x 2 +b 2 y 2 +c 2 z 2 +2abxycos  +2acxzcos  +2bcyzcos  ) 1/2 Similar formula.
Today: compute the experimental electron density map of proteinase K Fourier synthesis  (xyz)=  |F hkl | cos2  (hx+ky+lz -  hkl ) hkl.
Lecture 3 Patterson functions. Patterson functions The Patterson function is the auto-correlation function of the electron density ρ(x) of the structure.
Symmetry.
Lesson 11: Adding Translation Define pure translation within a cell—centering Combine translation with other symmetry operations to produce a new operations.
Crystal Structure and Crystallography of Materials
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M. Che
Phasing Today’s goal is to calculate phases (ap) for proteinase K using MIRAS method (PCMBS and GdCl3). What experimental data do we need? 1) from native.
Exponential and Logarithmic Functions
Crystals Crystal consist of the periodic arrangement of building blocks Each building block, called a basis, is an atom, a molecule, or a group of atoms.
X-ray Neutron Electron
Nobel Laureates of X Ray Crystallography
r(xyz)=S |Fhkl| cos2p(hx+ky+lz -ahkl)
A. The Solid State Classification of Solid Structures
Presentation transcript:

Lesson 22 SIR2011 Patterson Theory DIRDIF Patty Solve your structures

A Quick Review Formula and proposed structure – User Unit cell constants and cell volume – Indexing Probable Bravais class – Indexing Data – Data collection Final Bravais class, Laue group, space group and Z -- XPREP

Programs Charge Flipping—SUPERFLIP; PLATON, SHELXT Ab initio does not need formula or space group Direct Methods—SIR2004, SHELXS(xs) Uses E's Needs approximate formula to calculate E and space group Dual Space Direct Methods—SHELXD(xm) Like Direct Methods Brute Force Long Computing times

Another Use of E's Calculate the mean value of |E 2 -1| If this value is about 0.97 suggests the structure is centric If value is near 0.74 suggests structure is accentric Works best if all the atoms have about the same atomic number. Can be completely wrong!

SIR2011 Released December 2011 Written by the SIR group at Bari, Italy. So new that there is no published reference to it It uses a new method which is neither charge flipping or direct methods but sort of a combination. Uses Difference Fourier Maps

Fourier Map A Fourier map is a listing of electron density at any x,y,z in the unit cell. While it could be graphed usually it appears as a table. In most cases the peaks are selected and presented in a table Since we do not know the phases for the Fo then usually the values calculated from the atom positions (Fc) are used. It is the real space graph of the data

Contour Plot

Difference Fourier Map A properly phased Fourier Map based on Fo shows the electron density in the unit cell A Fourier map based on Fc shows the electron density accounted for by the current model Can subtract the two maps or simply calculate a Fourier based on |Fo-Fc| This is called a difference Fourier map.

Interpreting the Difference Fourier If there is a large positive peak in the map This means there is electron density in the data that is not account for in the model—i.e. A missing atom The size of the peak is indicative of the number of electrons in the missing atom If there is a large negative peak in the map This means there is electron density in the model that is not in the crystal –i.e. there is an atom in the model that should not be there Peaks very close to an atom are call ghosts and have to do with the scattering factors.

Sir2011 Sir2011 works with difference Fourier maps to sort of do charge flipping. This algorithm is called VLD which stands for vive la différence It starts by randomly placing atoms from the formula into the unit cell Therefore it needs the formula and cell symmetry unlike charge flipping

VLD 1. Start with atom positions 2. Do a Fourier to reciprocal space to calculate Fc and phases. Calculate r=Σ|Fo-Fc|/ΣFo. 3. Create a difference Fourier map (this will be incorrect because the phases are wrong and because many of the atoms are in the wrong position). 4. Get rid of atoms with large negative peaks in the difference Fourier and add atoms where there are large positive peaks. 5. Go to step 2 Continue until r-factor is acceptable

Advantages of SIR2011 It is very fast. It solves large structures that SIR2004 and charge flipping fail on It has software to help determine the space group if needed.

The heavy atom method By interpretation of the Patterson function, it is possible to find the positions of a small number of heavy atoms in the cell. These enable the calculated structure factor F c (a complex number) or the corresponding amplitude F c and phase  c to be calculated for each reflection. A difference Fourier synthesis with coefficients |F o –F c | and phases  c enables further atoms to be found as peaks; the approximation  =  c becomes better as the structure becomes more complete. The full structure may be found by iterative application of such difference maps. Although it is no longer considered necessary to prepare heavy atom derivatives such as bromobenzoates to solve small molecule structures (direct methods are so effective), heavy atom derivatives are still useful in macromolecular crystallography. Methionine can be replaced with selenomethionine and thymine with bromouracil; heavy ions such as Hg 2+, Pb 2+ and I – can be introduced by soaking the crystals in solutions of the appropriate salts, and even xenon derivatives may be prepared in special pressure chambers.

The Patterson function F 2 Patterson The Patterson function is a Fourier synthesis performed with all phases set to zero and the measured F 2 -values as coefficients. The dimensions of the unit-cell and the lattice type of the Patterson are identical with those of the crystal structure. The Patterson is a vector map: each atom- atom vector in the structure corresponds to a peak in the Patterson. The peak height is proportional to the product of the atomic numbers of the two atoms and to the number m of vectors that are equal in magnitude and direction and so overlap: H  m Z i Z j Usually the origin peak (height proportional to  Z i 2 ) is scaled to 999, so that the peak heights of the remaining peaks are given by: H = 999 m Z i Z j /  Z i 2 This summation is over all atoms in the unit-cell. FT

One heavy atom in P1 In this space group, for each atom at x, y, z there is a symmetry equivalent atom at –x, –y, –z and thus a Patterson peak at 2x, 2y, 2z. Crystals of C 32 H 24 AuF 5 P 2 have two formula units in the unit-cell. The two gold atoms are related to each other by the inversion center. In addition to the origin peak (999) there is a peak of height 374 with X=0.318, Y=0.471, Z=0.532, and of course a peak at –X, –Y, –Z, that are much higher than the rest (  145). This peak height is in good agreement with the calculated value of 377 for a Au—Au vector. In order to calculate x from 2x it would be far too simple just to divide by 2! We have to take into account that there must also be peaks in the next unit-cell of the Patterson with X = 2x+1 etc. Thus we calculate the possible gold coordinates as follows: x = 0.318/2 or 1.318/2 = or y = 0.471/2 or 1.471/2 = or z = 0.532/2 or 1.532/2 = or These eight possible positions correspond to the eight possible ways of putting the origin on an inversion center in space group P1.

Dimer in P-1

Interpretation of the Patterson XY Z height interpretation origin x(Ag)+x(As)‏ x(Ag)–x(As)‏ x(Ag)‏ · · · · · · x(As)‏ A consistent solution would be: Ag: x = 0.080, y = 0.143, z = As: x = 0.682, y = 0.039, z = For the first atom (Ag) there are 8 equivalent solutions, so one can simply divide 2x by 2. The second atom (As) must however be consistent with the Ag, so x(Ag) is subtracted from x of peak 2 and then checked whether this As position agrees with the other vectors.

The symmetry of the Patterson function Because for each vector i  j there is always a vector j  i, the Patterson must possess an Inversion center. In general the symmetry of the Patterson is determined by the symmetry of the diffraction pattern, which also possesses an inversion center. Glide planes of the space group become, as in reciprocal space, normal mirror planes, and screw axes become rotation axes without translation. In other words, the Patterson exhibits the same symmetry as the Laue group.

Harker sections The symmetry of the Patterson leads to a concentration of peaks in particular planes (or along particular lines). E.g. P2 1 : Atoms at x y z; –x ½+y –z. Self-vectors at 2x ½ 2z, Harker section at Y = ½. P2: Atoms at x y z; –x y –z. Self-vectors at 2x 0 2z, Harker section at Y = 0. Pm: Atoms at x y z; x –y z. Self-vectors at 0 2y 0, Harker line at X = 0, Z = 0. P2 and Pm would have identical systematic absences, but could be distinguished from one another using the Harker section and line. The 2 1 axis in P2 1 results in peaks concentrated in the Harker section at Y = ½; however the systematic absences k = 2n+1 for reflections 0 k 0 would give a more reliable indication of the the space group.

One heavy atom in P2 1 An organoselenium compound with one unique Se atom (two in the unit-cell) in P2 1 gave the Y = ½ Harker section in the diagram. The peaks at ±(2x ½ 2z) = ±( ) correspond to a Se atom at and its symmetry equivalent at – –0.18. In this space group one heavy atom is not sufficient to find the remaining atoms; a difference Fourier synthesis would be a double image, because the Se atoms correspond to a centrosymmetric substructure and can not resolve the enantiomorph!

Two independent heavy atoms in P2 1 x 1 y 1 z 1 x 2 y 2 z 2 –x 1 ½+y 1 –z 1 –x 2 ½+y 2 –z 2 x 1 y 1 z 1 0 –x 1 +x 2 –y 1 +y 2 –z 1 +z 2 –2x 1 ½ –2z 1 –x 1 –x 2 ½–y 1 +y 2 –z 1 –z 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 x 1 –x 2 y 1 –y 2 z 1 –z 2 0 –x 1 –x 2 ½+y 1 –y 2 –z 1 –z 2 –2x 2 ½ –2z 2 –x 1 ½+y 1 –z 1 2x 1 ½ 2z 1 x 1 +x 2 ½–y 1 +y 2 z 1 +z 2 0 x 1 –x 2 –y 1 +y 2 z 1 –z 2 –x 2 ½+y 2 –z 2 x 1 +x 2 ½+y 1 –y 2 z 1 +z 2 2x 2 ½ 2z 2 –x 1 +x 2 y 1 –y 2 –z 1 +z 2 0 In the table –½ is replaced by +½ because they are equivalent. These Patterson peaks can be summarized as follows: m = 4 origin ±{ 2x 1 ½ 2z 1 } m = 1 Harker section at y = ½ ±{ 2x 2 ½ 2z 2 } m = 1 ±{ x 1 –x 2 y 1 –y 2 z 1 –z 2 } m = 1 ±{ x 1 –x 2 –y 1 +y 2 z 1 –z 2 } m = 1 cross vectors ±{ x 1 +x 2 ½+y 1 –y 2 z 1 +z 2 } m = 1 ±{ x 1 +x 2 ½–y 1 +y 2 z 1 +z 2 } m = 1 The effective space group of this Patterson is P2/m, which can be deduced from the last four (general) vectors.

Problems with the heavy atom method In many cases, one heavy atom suffices to find the remaining atoms by (possibly iterative) application of difference Fourier syntheses with amplitudes |F o –F c | and Phases  c. Exceptions are those non- centrosymmetric space groups (such as P2 1 and C2) in which one unique heavy atom generates a centrosymmetric arrangement of heavy atoms in the cell; then all phases are 0º or 180º and the resulting difference electron density retains the inversion center, i.e. corresponds to a double image consisting of the two possible enantiomorphs. A different problem – which also arises when the structure is determined by direct methods – is the assignment of the element types; electron density is always blue! The density is proportional to the atomic number, but isoelectronic species are particularly difficult to distinguish, as will be seen in the first exercise...

DIRDIF Patty DIRDIF is a program package written by Paul Beurskens at the University of Nijmengen, Netherlands. Patty is the Patterson solver. Has one weakness—insists on using the formula for heavy atoms even if it is obviously wrong Look at r-factor  >0.50 no solution; <0.20 solution; intermediate may be solution with mis-assigned atoms.

The.ins FIle TITL xl in P2(1)/n CELL ZERR LATT 1 SYMM 0.5-X, 0.5+Y, 0.5-Z SFAC C H N I U UNIT TEMP SIZE TREF HKLF 4 END

Homework Assign all possible space groups to data with the following systematic presences Monoclinic—hkl, h+k=2n; h0l, l=2n Orthorhombic—0kl, k+l=2n; h0l,h=2n Orthorhombic-- hkl, h+k=2n, k+l=2n, h+l=2n; 0kl, k+l=4n; h0l, h+l=4n hexagonal/trigonal-- h-hl, l=2n; 00l, l=2n